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2020A&A...640A..51C - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 640A, 51-51 (2020/8-1)

Carbon isotopic fractionation in molecular clouds.

COLZI L., SIPILA O., ROUEFF E., CASELLI P. and FONTANI F.

Abstract (from CDS):


Context. Carbon fractionation has been studied from a theoretical point of view with different models of time-dependent chemistry, including both isotope-selective photodissociation and low-temperature isotopic exchange reactions.
Aims. Recent chemical models predict that isotopic exchange reactions may lead to a depletion of 13C in nitrile-bearing species, with 12C/13C ratios two times higher than the elemental abundance ratio of 68 in the local interstellar medium. Since the carbon isotopic ratio is commonly used to evaluate the 14N/15N ratios with the double-isotope method, it is important to study carbon fractionation in detail to avoid incorrect assumptions.
Methods. In this work, we implemented a gas-grain chemical model with new isotopic exchange reactions and investigated their introduction in the context of dense and cold molecular gas. In particular, we investigated the 12C/13C ratios of HNC, HCN, and CN using a grid of models, with temperatures and densities ranging from 10 to 50 K and 2x103 to 2x107cm–3, respectively.
Results. We suggest a possible 13C exchange through the 13C+C3-12C+13CC2 reaction, which does not result in dilution, but rather in 13C enhancement, for molecules that are formed starting from atomic carbon. This effect is efficient in a range of time between the formation of CO and its freeze-out on grains. Furthermore, the parameter-space exploration shows, on average, that the 12C/13C ratios of nitriles are predicted to be a factor 0.8-1.9 different from the local 12C/13C of 68 for high-mass star-forming regions. This result also affects the 14N/15N ratio: a value of 330 obtained with the double-isotope method is predicted to vary in the range 260-630, up to 1150, depending on the physical conditions. Finally, we studied the 12C/13C ratios of nitriles by varying the cosmic-ray ionisation rate, ζ: the 12C/13C ratios increase with ζ because of secondary photons and cosmic-ray reactions.

Abstract Copyright: © ESO 2020

Journal keyword(s): astrochemistry - methods: numerical - ISM: molecules - molecular processes

Simbad objects: 13

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